Luke 19:1-10 · Zacchaeus the Tax Collector
Real Gratitude
Luke 19:1-10
Sermon
by James W. Moore
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I want to begin this morning by telling you about two of my most prized possessions.

The first one is a simple ordinary rock. It’s a rock with some green and yellow paint splattered on it. I use it as a paper weight on my desk. I have had it for over 30 years. It’s not worth a lot, but I cherish it. If I tried to sell it, I couldn’t get much money for it, but you see, I would never even consider selling it, because I treasure it so much. Why is it so special to me? Not because of what it is. Not because of how it looks. Not even because of what it does… but because of the one who gave it to me. That’s what makes it special – the one who loved me and gave it to me. Our son, Jeff, gave that green and yellow paper weight rock to me when he was 5 years old. He made it for me in Sunday School. It’s the symbol of his love. The giver, not the gift, makes it special.

The second prized possession of mine that I want to tell you about today is a homemade greeting card. I have also had it for over 30 years – and I just love that card. I treasure that card so much because our daughter, Jodi, made it for me when she was 6 years old. On the front of the card, it reads, “To the Most Sweetest Father on Earth.” And it has her own sketch of planet Earth. Inside it reads, “Happy Birthday,” then that is scratched through… followed by “Happy Father’s Day,” followed by the notation, “Oops! Everybody makes mistakes.” And it is signed, “Love, Jodi (6 years old).

These gifts are special to me because of the special persons who gave them to me. That is the real key to life, the real key to joy, the real key to genuine gratitude, to stress the giver rather than the gifts. For you see, we can gain the whole world and all the gifts and miss the giver and lose our own souls.

Celebrating the giver rather than the gift – that is the key and when you make that breakthrough, you can never be the same. That kind of gratitude will change your life! There is a beautiful example of this in the Bible – the story of Zacchaeus in Luke 19. Remember the story with me.

Jesus and His disciples are heading toward the show-down in Jerusalem. As they pass through Jericho, a great crowd gathered to see Jesus. Zaccheus was in the crowd. The scriptures tell us that Zacchaeus was a chief tax collector and rich… and that he was disliked and despised by his fellow townspeople. They resented paying taxes to Rome and they felt that Zacchaeus, a fellow Jew, had betrayed them, has sold out to Rome, and had gotten rich at their expense. So, they rejected him, shunned him, detested him. If you had conducted a popularity contest in Jericho that day, Zacchaeus may well have come in dead last.

This was the setting when Jesus came to Jericho that day. People had heard about Jesus and they gathered along the streets to see Him. Zacchaeus was also eager to see the Nazarene, but Zacchaeus was a little man and he couldn’t see over the crowd. So Zacchaeus ran ahead and climbed into a sycamore tree in hopes of getting a glimpse of this great leader everyone was talking about.

When Jesus saw him, he sensed that Zacchaeus was the loneliest man in town and His heart went out to him. Jesus looked up and said, “Zacchaeus, make haste and come down for I must stay at your house today.” Zacchaeus was visibly touched, indeed, overwhelmed by this acceptance and this special honor. It had been a long time since anyone had been nice to him. Zacchaeus was so grateful, so filled with gratitude, that it changed his life. Notice that Jesus gave him no material gifts. He gave him something better: love, respect, acceptance… forgiveness. Zacchaeus became so grateful that his whole lifestyle changed. Why, it even touched his pocketbook. Before he had been a “taker,” and now he became a “giver.”

That’s the way it works. When we become truly grateful to God for the gift of His love… we can’t be the same anymore! We are changed! We are turned around. We are converted, transformed. Zacchaeus was so grateful for Christ’s acceptance of him and love for him that his life, his relationships and his reason for living were all dramatically changed. That’s what real gratitude does! It changes our lives!

Let me show you what I mean.

I. REAL GRATITUDE GIVES US A NEW RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD.

When you realize that God is loving, accepting, forgiving… it changes your life. You don’t have to be afraid or anxiety-ridden anymore… Gratitude becomes the lifeblood of your lifestyle. Zacchaeus learned it that day in Jericho… and it gave him a new relationship with God… not a relationship built on fear and appeasement, but now a relationship built on love and grace.

Some years ago here at St. Luke’s we started a new Sunday School class for special needs adults who need special education. Most of the class members live in a special center just off Allen Parkway and we send a van to pick them up and bring them to Sunday School and church every Sunday. They have made a special place for themselves in our St. Luke’s family. They love to come here and we love having them here. We named them the Joy Class and they are well-named because they are a joy.

When we first started the class, there was a young man in the group named Spencer. Spencer came every Sunday, but he did not participate in the class at all. He seemed sad and suspicious, so he withdrew. He sat all by himself in the corner and stared at the floor. He would not sit at the table with the others. He would not eat the refreshments. He would not sing the songs. He would not speak to anybody or look at anybody. No matter how we tried, we could not connect with Spencer. We coaxed and reasoned and pleaded, but no luck. Spencer would do absolutely nothing but sit in the corner all by himself and stare at the floor.

And then one day, everything changed, and it happened in the most unusual way. A volunteer in our church named Bob would go up to the Joy Class a few times each month to lead their song time. The class members really enjoy singing and Bob would play his banjo and sing songs with the class and they all loved it, all, that is, except Spencer over in his corner. The class would sing songs like “Jesus Loves Me,” “Amazing Grace,” The Old Rugged Cross,” “Sweet Hour of Prayer”… and they would all sing along enthusiastically with Bob and his banjo. All, that is, except Spencer.

And then one day, who knows why, Bob started playing his banjo and singing “Skip to My Lou.” Bob had not planned to sing “Skip to My Lou” that morning. It just bubbled out of him… and then the most amazing thing happened. Spencer jumped up out of his chair and did something no one in the class had ever seen him do before – he broke into a big smile! And then for the very first time, Spencer left his corner! He started skipping around the room, laughing and singing “Skip to My Lou! at the top of his voice... and when the song was over, Spencer stopped skipping around the room, and he sat down at the table with the others! He joined the group!

The class member and leaders were so excited, they all hugged him and welcomed him and patted him lovingly on the back. Spencer smiled broadly and from that point forward, he joyously and enthusiastically participated in everything the Joy Class did, right up until the time he moved away with his family to another city. There was something about that song, “Skip to My Lou” that somehow touched something deep within Spencer and let him know that the Joy Class was a good thing for him, and from that point he joined in and loved the class.

We were mystified and curious. We investigated and found that Spencer had loved his grandmother deeply and he had lived with his grandmother right up until the time of her death. The day after her funeral he was moved to the center on Allen Parkway. We also found out that when Spencer was a little boy he would walk to Sunday School and church with his grandmother and all the way there and back as they walked, he and his grandmother would sing, “Skip to My Lou!” That song reminded him of the love and acceptance and joy he knew at church with his grandmother, and when Bob and the class began singing that on that pivotal Sunday morning, Spencer suddenly realized that he was in Sunday School and church, and he then knew with confidence that this was a good place for him to be. That experience gave Spencer a new relationship with the Joy Class, and a new relationship with God.

All of a sudden, the class became for Spencer a beautiful place and a beautiful group, the symbol of God’s acceptance of him and God’s love for him. The light bulb turned on and Spencer realized, “This is church and I’m loved here and valued here and treasured here!”

Something like that happened to Zacchaeus that day. As Jesus came to him and accepted him, that acceptance touched something deep within Zacchaeus and brought him back to his senses and back to God, and caused him to see things differently.

Likewise, when we love God and accept his love for us, then we can suddenly see things differently. We see all the beautiful things He has graciously given us. Everywhere we look, everything we see reminds us of God… and all that He has lovingly prepared for us. Real gratitude gives us a new relationship with God – and causes us to see miracles everywhere.

Albert Einstein once put it like this: “There are only two ways to live your life: one is to see nothing as a miracle – the other is to see everything as a miracle.” That’s the number one thing we learn from the Zacchaeus story. Real gratitude gives us a new relationship with God.

II. SECOND, REAL GRATITUDE GIVES US A NEW REGARD FOR OTHERS.

In the “Wizard of Id” comic strip, the priest asks, “Of all the major sins, which do you consider to be number one?” “Well,” came the reply, “They’re all bad, but I think I like greed the best!”

Zacchaeus could have identified with that. He had been greedy. He had cheated. He had taken advantage of others… but then Jesus came to him and reached out to him and included him and ate with him, which in New Testament times was a dramatic symbol of forgiveness… and Zacchaeus was changed, redeemed, converted.

He was so grateful that Jesus had accepted him that he came down out of that Sycamore tree with love in his heart. He had a new regard for others and said, “Behold Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor and I will pay back four times over all those I have cheated.” That’s what real gratitude does for you. It enables you to see people differently. It causes you to see other people lovingly.

Some years ago, I ran across a story about a young college student who was visited one weekend by his father… at a prestigious college in the East. The father had an old dilapidated car. When the dad drove away to go home, some of the boy’s friends began to laugh and tease and make fun of that car. The young man said, “You can laugh if you want to, but let me tell you something. My father could have had a new car years ago if he had wanted one. He had the money to buy it, but he wanted me to have an education at this school… more than he wanted a new car for himself. The only reason I am here is because he chose to drive that old car. I am so grateful to him because in that one generous sacrificial act, he taught me so much about life and thoughtfulness and love. I love that old car and I love the man in it.”

That’s just the way it works. The Zacchaeus story teaches us that real gratitude gives us a new

relationship with God and a new regard for others.

III. THIRD AND FINALLY, REAL GRATITUDE GIVES US A NEW REASON FOR LIVING.

Every now and then I try to think of a new idea about what it means to be grateful. Here is my thought for this year: If gratitude is the celebration of God’s generosity, then the Christian lifestyle is the imitation of God’s generosity. That is, the best way to express our gratitude to God is to imitate, to model, to emulate His generosity in our daily living, to take on His gracious and generous approach and to live daily in that spirit.

Zacchaeus got it! He saw it and did it! The question is, do we? Are we God-like in our living?

Bill and Tom were best friends. They enjoyed each other’s company and had since they were children. They had grown up together. They loved to hunt and fish. One Saturday morning, they went hunting and there was an accident. As Bill was climbing over a barbed wire fence, he fell and his gun went off, and he shot himself in the leg. He began to bleed profusely. Tom rushed to him and made a tourniquet to slow the bleeding. Then, Tom picked Bill up, put Bill on his back and carried him over two miles through rough terrain to get to their car, all the while saying,

“You hang in there, Bill. Don’t you die on me. I’m going to get you to the hospital and we are going to get you well.”

Tom tenderly got Bill in the car and rushed him to a nearby hospital for emergency surgery. It went well and afterwards the doctor told Bill that he would be all right and that he would recover nicely. The doctor also told Bill what Bill already knew – that Tom had saved his life!

Some years later, Tom had to undergo heart surgery. Bill stayed with Tom and Tom’s wife around the clock for days and days. He would not leave the hospital. He would not leave his best friend. The medical staff at the hospital noticed this. They told Bill to not worry that everything was going great for Tom. He was recovering beautifully. They told Bill that it was O.K. to leave and get some rest because he must be exhausted. Bill thanked them for their concern and then he told them the story of how Tom had carried him on his back for over two miles to save his life years before, and then he said: “After what Tom did for me there is nothing I would not do for him. If it weren’t for Tom, I wouldn’t be here today. I owe him everything. I owe him my life!”

That’s how Zacchaeus felt about what Jesus did for him… and that is precisely how we as Christians gratefully feel because that is precisely what Jesus Christ has done for us. He has saved our lives, so there is nothing we would not do for Him… because He is the One who has given us a new relationship with God, a new regard for others, and a new reason for living.

Christianglobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James W. Moore